First, read throughKarl Rove's stunningly cocky 
op-ed in the Wall Street Journal--
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052970203550604574360500363745662.html
--then read this important xposé by Larisa Alexandrovna.

It's important to all those of us who care about, 
like, justice, and the truth. That may not
be enough to interest AG Holder, but it should 
push us to keep pushing him, and Obama,
to pay attention.

MCM

Rove op-ed reveals he had inside information about probe

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BY LARISA ALEXANDROVNA

http://rawstory.com/08/news/2009/08/20/rove-op-ed-reveals-he-had-inside-information-about-probe/

Lawyer declines to say how he found out accuser 
didn't talk to Justice Department

Karl Rove's latest attempt to proclaim his 
innocence and demand apologies from those who 
have accused him of being behind the prosecution 
of former Alabama Governor Don Siegelman may 
backfire if it turns out that Rove was improperly 
receiving inside information after leaving his 
position as Deputy White House Chief of Staff.

"For more than two years," Rove writes in the 
Wall Street Journal, "House Judiciary Committee 
Democrats and the New York Times editorial board 
have argued that I personally arranged for 
Alabama Gov. Don Siegelman to be prosecuted in 
2004 for corruption and ordered the removal of 
eight U.S. attorneys in 2006 for failing to 
investigate Democrats. The Washington Post 
editorial board also echoed this last charge. The 
Times and the Post have published a combined 18 
editorials on these issues, which were also 
catnip to House Judiciary Committee Democrats."

Rove then goes on to attack Dana Jill Simpson, an 
Alabama Republican lawyer turned whistleblower 
who has linked him to the Siegelman prosecution. 
In doing so, however, he raises serious questions 
of impropriety by revealing that he has received 
confidential information from both the House 
Judiciary Committee and the Department of Justice.

"Committee staff confided to me that they 
considered her an unreliable witness," Rove says 
of Simpson. "I also understand that Mr. Siegelman 
and Ms. Simpson refused to cooperate with the 
Justice Department's review of his claim of 
political persecution, while I willingly gave 
sworn testimony."

Simpson's allegations

Simpson - who worked for then-Republican 
Congressman Bob Riley as an opposition researcher 
during his successful 2002 campaign to unseat 
then-Governor Don Siegelman - alleged in a 2007 
affidavit that Riley's campaign staff had used 
unscrupulous means to force Siegelman not to 
contest the outcome of the election and also 
stated that "Karl" had taken a personal interest 
in the matter.

In even more explosive testimony before the House 
Judiciary Committee, Simpson further described a 
conference call during which Riley campaign 
advisor Bill Canary said that "Rove had spoken 
with the Department of Justice" about "pursuing" 
Siegelman and advised Riley's staff "not to worry 
about Don Siegelman" because "'his girls' would 
take care of" the governor.

Canary is a longtime friend and business 
associate of Karl Rove, and the "girls" to whom 
he allegedly referred were his wife Leura Canary, 
who was US Attorney for the Middle District of 
Alabama, and Alice Martin, who was US Attorney 
for the Northern District.

Siegelman had been the target of a series of 
investigations launched by his political 
opponents just a few weeks after the took office 
as governor in 1999, and those investigations 
were escalated from the state to the federal 
level by Bush Administration appointees in 2001. 
He was charged with corruption in 2005, just as 
he was attempting a political comeback, was 
convicted and sentenced to seven years in prison, 
and is currently out on appeal.

Rove's op-ed is intended in part to refute 
persistent claims, by Siegelman and others, that 
he was directly involved in the prosection.

The Office of Professional Responsibility

Simpson's testimony before the House Judiciary 
Committee, along with other evidence, prompted an 
investigation into Leura Canary and Alice Martin 
by the Office of Professional Responsibility, 
which is tasked with investigating corruption 
allegations against attorneys employed by the 
Department of Justice.

Rove's remarkable admission that he 
"understand[s] that Mr. Siegelman and Ms. Simpson 
refused to cooperate with the Justice 
Department's review of his claim of political 
persecution, while I willingly gave sworn 
testimony," opens both Rove himself and and the 
OPR to questions of serious impropriety.

Pricilla Duncan, Simpson's former attorney, said 
during a Thursday morning phone interview that 
she was concerned and wanted to know "how Rove 
could possibly know who the [Department of 
Justice] was interviewing and which witnesses 
were cooperating or not?"

When asked for comment, Rove's attorney, Robert 
Luskin, clarified Rove's statement about Simpson 
refusing to cooperate. He wrote in an email to 
Raw Story, "I think he's referring to the current 
round of hearings/interviews. You are correct 
that she provided an affidavit and interview 
previously. She did decline to cooperate with the 
OPR investigation at Justice."

Luskin declined, however, to comment as to how he 
found out Simpson had not testified.

Fresh questions about the Department of Justice

Asked if Rove's claims were true and if her 
former client had in fact refused to cooperate 
with OPR, Duncan said yes. But her revelations 
about why Simpson had refused to cooperate raise 
additional questions of impropriety by the 
Department of Justice.

According to documents supplied by Duncan to Raw 
Story - two of which are emails between Duncan 
and the DOJ and are quoted below - the OPR 
appears to have been investigating Simpson 
herself rather than the US Attorneys whom Simpson 
had alleged were involved in political 
prosecution of Don Siegelman.

Duncan says, "My client refused to cooperate in 
an investigation that had nothing to do with her 
allegations, but were entirely focused on her 
personal life."

On September 19, 2008, an OPR attorney - Lisa 
Howard - sent this email to Duncan, requesting 
Simpson's cooperation:

From: Howard, Lisa (OPR)
To: XXXXXX
Sent: 9/19/2008 12:33:48 PM
Subject: Jill Simpson

Ms. Duncan - I am an attorney with the Office of 
Professional Responsibility at the U.S. 
Department of Justice involved in investigating 
allegations that former Alabama governor Don 
Siegelman's prosecution was politically 
motivated. I have learned that you represented 
Ms. Simpson when she was interviewed by the U.S. 
House of Representatives Committee on the 
Judiciary.

I would like to contact Ms. Simpson by letter to 
ask her to agree to an interview with OPR about 
the Siegelman matter. Do you still represent her, 
or can you tell me if she is represented by 
someone else? If she is unrepresented, can you 
tell me her mailing address? You can call me to 
discuss my request at 202-305-2544. Thank you."

By this time, Simpson had been told by a former 
client, an ex-husband, and a former close friend 
that officials from the Federal Bureau of 
Investigations and the DOJ had approached them 
asking questions about Simpson's private life, 
including her adopted daughter, her sexual 
behavior, and her business practices.

"No one was asked about Siegelman or any of the allegations," Duncan said.

When Duncan learned of these interviews, she 
refused to let her client meet with OPR because 
"it became clear they were not investigating 
anyone but Jill."

"They only asked me if Jill had anything more to 
add outside of her testimony and that was that," 
Duncan added.
In response to the DOJ's questioning of Simpson's 
family and friends, Duncan wrote an email to Lisa 
Howard:

From: Priscilla Duncan
Sent: Friday, January 23, 2009 12:56 PM
To: Howard, Lisa (OPR)
Subject: RE: Jill Simpson

Dear Ms. Howard:

My client and I have been waiting for your OPR 
report on Gov. Siegelman's case with interest.

To our understanding, the only efforts your 
office put forth in this matter were to hire Jim 
Sullivan, the criminal division chief for 
discredited U.S. Attorney Alice Martin, and 
William Causey, from your office, to attempt to 
badger Miss Simpson's former client, a husband 
she has not seen in 12 years and an old 
girlfriend into saying something to discredit her.

(redacted material)

It was the suspicion that this sort of 
"investigation" was what your office had in mind 
that convinced Ms. Simpson not to participate in 
this sham investigation. Any attempts to 
discredit Ms. Simpson by your office will be met 
with litigation against the individuals involved. 
Since there is no remote connection with your 
charge in this inquiry, you and your minions have 
no hope of claiming prosecutory privilege.

Columbia law professor and legal contributor to 
Harper's Magazine, Scott Horton, who has been 
investigating the matter, confirms part of 
Duncan's account.

"Rove's claim that Simpson failed to cooperate 
with the DOJ investigation is untruthful - and 
this is a point I have studied," Horton wrote in 
an email to Raw Story.

"In fact what happened was this: DOJ 
investigators contacted Simpson's attorney and 
asked her whether Simpson had any information to 
share beyond her testimony and the documents she 
produced to Congress. She said "no." That was the 
end of it. Simpson was entirely willing to meet 
and discuss the matter with the investigators - 
unlike Rove. And also unlike Rove, she had 
already testified and been crossexamined under 
oath and had produced her documents, so it was 
not really necessary."

Lisa Howard of OPR did not return calls for comment.

Rove's claims of an inside source at the House Judiciary Committee

In addition to the claims relating to Ms. 
Simpson, Rove also wrote in his op-ed that 
"Committee staff confided to me that they 
considered [Simpson] an unreliable witness."

In this reporter's conversations with the House 
Judiciary Committee, Simpson was always described 
as a credible witness. Horton conforms that he 
has had much the same experience in his own 
dealings with HJC staffers.
"I have spoken repeatedly with Committee staff 
myself and formed exactly the opposite view," 
wrote Horton in an email. "They consider Simpson 
a highly credible witness. Moreover, you don't 
need to take my word for it since we have 
explicit evidence for just that proposition: they 
issued a report which relies, heavily and 
repeatedly, on Simpson's testimony - not 
something which they would have done had they 
disbelieved her or found her testimony not 
credible,"

"What Rove means to say, perhaps, is this: "I 
have spoken with _Republican_ staffers at the 
Judiciary Committee,Š" And yes, it is clear that 
the job of Republican staffers on the committee 
was to challenge Simpson's credibility. The peak 
of this effort came when Randy Forbes (R-VA) 
claimed that there was no evidence to corroborate 
Simpson's claims of a telephone conference with 
Rob Riley's office on a specific date. Recall 
that Artur Davis (D-AL) turned Forbes into a 
proverbial greasespot by whipping out the phone 
records and showing that they did, in fact, 
reflect exactly the call she discussed at the 
time she discussed it. The Republican staffers, 
as usual, did no research, resting instead on 
Rove's "facts" as facts.

"But this shows just what I expected," Horton 
continues, "namely that Rove was communicating 
with G.O.P. staffers throughout the process to 
get information about the investigation - a 
process that violated his understanding with the 
Committee. Just as he violated his agreement by 
giving "exclusive" interviews to the NY Times and 
Washington Post before the process was completed. 
What this shows is two-fold: Rove isn't bothered 
in the slightest by breaking his agreements, and 
Rove is the master of the half-truth and the 
outright lie."

Requests for comment to the House Judiciary 
Committee were not immediately returned.

Larisa Alexandrovna is managing editor of 
investigative news for Raw Story. Contact: 
lar...@rawstory.com.
Related Raw Story Articles
I: 
http://rawstory.com/08/blog/2007/11/26/the-permanent-republican-majority-how-a-coterie-of-republican-heavyweights-sent-a-governor-to-jail/
II: 
http://rawstory.com/08/blog/2007/11/27/daughter-of-jailed-governor-sees-white-house-hand-in-her-fathers-fall/
III: 
http://rawstory.com/08/blog/2007/12/16/running-elections-from-the-white-house/
http://rawstory.com/08/blog/2008/02/25/alabama-station-drops-broadcast-of-60-minutes-expose-on-political-prosecution-scandal/
http://rawstory.com/08/blog/2008/02/25/in-exclusive-interview-alabama-whistleblower-says-rove-trying-to-smear-her/
VI: 
http://rawstory.com/08/blog/2008/05/01/break-ins-plague-targets-of-us-attorneys/
http://rawstory.com/08/blog/2008/06/05/justice-department-investigating-two-us-attorneys-for-political-prosecution/
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